The composition of the album is definitely high quality as I can imagine any of the tracks appearing in featured films or television programs. It has an "ordinary" sound that makes it so easy to listen, but I would hardly describe it as boring. Each track seems to convey a story or specific emotions that we experience in daily life.

The composition of the album is definitely high quality as I can imagine any of the tracks appearing in featured films or television programs. It has an "ordinary" sound that makes it so easy to listen, but I would hardly describe it as boring. Each track seems to convey a story or specific emotions that we experience in daily life.

À Jamais Privé de Réponses is the debut full length album from French-Canadian New Wave group, Paupière. This album greets two singles and an EP in Paupière's discography, and I have to say, I like it. Paupière pushes past the mere novelty of it's foreign language pop group origins into a uniquely fun listen.

Cullen Omori has come a long way since his days as a member of the popular indie group, Smith Westerns, which unfortunately ended in late 2014. After a few years of lackluster singles and a bland 2016 album titled New Misery, Cullen Omori has officially found something special in The Diet.

The Molochs latest effort starts out sounding like a brief ode to the easy going, yet catchy rhythms of 90s Alt acts married with a somewhat vintage sound reminiscent of 1960s ballad makers.

Track #2, "I Wanna Say To You" sounds like a summertime song with a rhythm as simple sounding as any of Oaisis's songs off their masterpiece album "What's The Story Morning Glory". Most notably the rhyme on "Wonderwall". I love this song as much as I loved that band's music in the 90s.

Sounds Like:

90s Alt acts

Sounds Like:

A somewhat vintage sound reminiscent of 1960s ballad makers.

Sounds Like:

A summertime song with a rhythm as simple sounding as any of Oasis's songs off their masterpiece album "What's The Story Morning Glory". Most notably the rhythm on "Wonderwall".

Sounds Like:

Very ballad-like with an upbeat rhythm that sounds like the songs your parents would listen to at a Sadie Hawkins dance or any other social-mating ritual in the 1960s.

Sounds Like:

As hook-ridden as a teenage anthem and makes you want to sing: la-la-la along with the chorus.

Sounds Like:

An infusion of pop with folk and compliments the lyrics as well as any 90s song that talked about Teen angst in a sing-song style. It sounds like: "Da da da da da da da da da. Na Na. In the story life I am old...

Sounds Like:

Any catchy Blink-182 song with sing-a-long lyrics combined with pop-ridden guitar riffs. The greatest example of this similarity would be the track "First Date".

Hard-hitting guitar riffs accompanied by gradual, yet syncopated drumming. That is how Interpol has chosen to open their latest album, Marauders. Interpol is a band that I have followed since at least one of their songs was featured during an episode of Fox’s former hit teen soap, The O.C. Their sound back then sounded like a newer take on alternative, and with their latest release Marauders their sound seems to have remained aggressively alternative with some other influences mixed-in.

I know nothing of Bênní. I know nothing about them. I assume they live a post-apocaylptic, tron-lite universe. I assume they assembled reclaimed wires and dials and knobs in such a manner to communicate to our world. I assume synthesizers survived the endtimes. If 80's cinema tought us anything, it's that after the bombs fall and all is lost, all sound that remains is the scuttling of cockroaches and the eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeBWOMMMMMMP of a synthesizer.